Willis the Pilot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 410 pages of information about Willis the Pilot.

Willis the Pilot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 410 pages of information about Willis the Pilot.

When the first shock had passed, and the company had regained their self-possession, Jack related, with his customary originality, the incidents of the nocturnal expedition, of which Fritz was the originator, leader, and hero.  The ladies then, for the first time, were made acquainted with the doubts, fears, perplexities, and battues, which, out of gallantry, they had hitherto been kept in ignorance of.  Becker then, having carefully investigated the creature, pronounced it to be (as we already know) a full-grown specimen of a kind of ape, called by the Africans “the wild man of the woods,” and by naturalists the jocko or chimpanzee.

“It is naturally very savage,” added Becker; “but this individual seems already to have received some degree of education.”

As a proof of this, the chimpanzee seated himself amongst them very much at his ease; he scanned the faces surrounding him with an air of curiosity, and seemed to search for a particular countenance that it annoyed him not to find.  Some fruit and nuts that were given him put him in excellent humor.

“He has, without doubt, been on board some ship, wrecked on the coast,” said Wolston, “for I recollect having read that his kindred are only found in Western Africa and the adjacent islands; do you not recognize him, Willis, to belong to the Nelson, like the plank of the other day?”

“No, sir.”

“So much the better.”

“We do not ship such cattle on board his Majesty’s ships,” added the Pilot.

The girls, ashamed of their fear, now came peeping in at the door, and, seeing that nobody had been devoured, took refuge by the side of their mother.

“Look here, father,” said Ernest, feeling the creature’s crania, after having facetiously begged pardon for the liberty, “its head is precisely like our own; that is very humiliating.”

“Yes, my son, but his tongue and other organs are also exactly like ours, yet he cannot utter a word.  His head is of the same form and proportion, but he does not for all that possess human intelligence.  Is this not a very striking proof that mere matter, though perfectly organized, neither produces words nor thought; and that it requires a special manifestation of the Divine will to call these attributes into existence?”

“True; but, father, some writers say that apes have been observed to profit by fires lighted in the forest, and have gone and warmed themselves when the travellers left.”

“That, my son, is instinct, nothing more; the operation of keeping up a fire, by throwing a few branches upon it, is exceedingly simple, but their instinct has never been known to rise to that amount of intelligence.”

“You recollect, father, that heathcock we saw some years ago displaying his glossy plumage to the dazzled hens; is that not a well-marked proof of coquetry? and is not this coquetry an indication of something more than mere instinct?”

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Willis the Pilot from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.